On the road leading north from Manchester,
in eastern Kentucky, to Booneville, twenty miles away,
stood, in 1862, a wooden plantation house of a somewhat
better quality than most of the dwellings in that
region. The house was destroyed by fire in the
year following—probably by some stragglers from
the retreating column of General George W. Morgan,
when he was driven from Cumberland Gap to the Ohio
river by General Kirby Smith. At the time of
its destruction, it had for four or five years been
vacant. The fields about it were overgrown with
brambles, the fences gone, even the few negro quarters,
and out-houses generally, fallen partly into ruin by
neglect and pillage; for the negroes and poor whites
of the vicinity found in the building and fences an
abundant supply of fuel, of which they availed themselves
without hesitation, openly and by daylight.
By daylight alone; after nightfall no human being except
passing strangers ever went near the place.
It was known as the “Spook House.”
That it was tenanted by evil spirits, visible, audible
and active, no one in all that region doubted any
more than he doubted what he was told of Sundays by
the traveling preacher. Its owner’s opinion
of the matter was unknown; he and his family had disappeared
one night and no trace of them had ever been found.
They left everything—household goods, clothing,
provisions, the horses in the stable, the cows in the
field, the negroes in the quarters—all
as it stood; nothing was missing— except
a man, a woman, three girls, a boy and a babe!
It was not altogether surprising that a plantation
where seven human beings could be simultaneously effaced
and nobody the wiser should be under some suspicion.
One night in June, 1859, two citizens
of Frankfort, Col. J. C. McArdle, a lawyer, and
Judge Myron Veigh, of the State Militia, were driving
from Booneville to Manchester. Their business
was so important that they decided to push on, despite
the darkness and the mutterings of an approaching
storm, which eventually broke upon them just as they
arrived opposite the “Spook House.”
The lightning was so incessant that they easily found
their way through the gateway and into a shed, where
they hitched and unharnessed their team. They
then went to the house, through the rain, and knocked
at all the doors without getting any response.
Attributing this to the continuous uproar of the
thunder they pushed at one of the doors, which yielded.
They entered without further ceremony and closed the
door. That instant they were in darkness and
silence. Not a gleam of the lightning’s
unceasing blaze penetrated the windows or crevices;
not a whisper of the awful tumult without reached them
there. It was as if they had suddenly been stricken
blind and deaf, and McArdle afterward said that for
a moment he believed himself to have been killed by
a stroke of lightning as he crossed the threshold.
The rest of this adventure can as well be related
in his own words, from the Frankfort Advocate of August
6, 1876:
“When I had somewhat recovered
from the dazing effect of the transition from uproar
to silence, my first impulse was to reopen the door
which I had closed, and from the knob of which I was
not conscious of having removed my hand; I felt it
distinctly, still in the clasp of my fingers.
My notion was to ascertain by stepping again into
the storm whether I had been deprived of sight and
hearing. I turned the doorknob and pulled open
the door. It led into another room!
“This apartment was suffused
with a faint greenish light, the source of which I
could not determine, making everything distinctly
visible, though nothing was sharply defined.
Everything, I say, but in truth the only objects within
the blank stone walls of that room were human corpses.
In number they were perhaps eight or ten—it
may well be understood that I did not truly count them.
They were of different ages, or rather sizes, from
infancy up, and of both sexes. All were prostrate
on the floor, excepting one, apparently a young woman,
who sat up, her back supported by an angle of the wall.
A babe was clasped in the arms of another and older
woman. A half-grown lad lay face downward across
the legs of a full-bearded man. One or two were
nearly naked, and the hand of a young girl held the
fragment of a gown which she had torn open at the breast.
The bodies were in various stages of decay, all greatly
shrunken in face and figure. Some were but little
more than skeletons.
“While I stood stupefied with
horror by this ghastly spectacle and still holding
open the door, by some unaccountable perversity my
attention was diverted from the shocking scene and
concerned itself with trifles and details. Perhaps
my mind, with an instinct of self-preservation, sought
relief in matters which would relax its dangerous
tension. Among other things, I observed that
the door that I was holding open was of heavy iron
plates, riveted. Equidistant from one another
and from the top and bottom, three strong bolts protruded
from the beveled edge. I turned the knob and
they were retracted flush with the edge; released it,
and they shot out. It was a spring lock.
On the inside there was no knob, nor any kind of
projection—a smooth surface of iron.
“While noting these things with
an interest and attention which it now astonishes
me to recall I felt myself thrust aside, and Judge
Veigh, whom in the intensity and vicissitudes of my
feelings I had altogether forgotten, pushed by me
into the room. ‘For God’s sake,’
I cried, ’do not go in there! Let us get
out of this dreadful place!’
“He gave no heed to my entreaties,
but (as fearless a gentleman as lived in all the South)
walked quickly to the center of the room, knelt beside
one of the bodies for a closer examination and tenderly
raised its blackened and shriveled head in his hands.
A strong disagreeable odor came through the doorway,
completely overpowering me. My senses reeled;
I felt myself falling, and in clutching at the edge
of the door for support pushed it shut with a sharp
click!
“I remember no more: six
weeks later I recovered my reason in a hotel at Manchester,
whither I had been taken by strangers the next day.
For all these weeks I had suffered from a nervous
fever, attended with constant delirium. I had
been found lying in the road several miles away from
the house; but how I had escaped from it to get there
I never knew. On recovery, or as soon as my physicians
permitted me to talk, I inquired the fate of Judge
Veigh, whom (to quiet me, as I now know) they represented
as well and at home.
“No one believed a word of my
story, and who can wonder? And who can imagine
my grief when, arriving at my home in Frankfort two
months later, I learned that Judge Veigh had never
been heard of since that night? I then regretted
bitterly the pride which since the first few days
after the recovery of my reason had forbidden me to
repeat my discredited story and insist upon its truth.
“With all that afterward occurred—the
examination of the house; the failure to find any
room corresponding to that which I have described;
the attempt to have me adjudged insane, and my triumph
over my accusers—the readers of the Advocate
are familiar. After all these years I am still
confident that excavations which I have neither the
legal right to undertake nor the wealth to make would
disclose the secret of the disappearance of my unhappy
friend, and possibly of the former occupants and owners
of the deserted and now destroyed house. I do
not despair of yet bringing about such a search, and
it is a source of deep grief to me that it has been
delayed by the undeserved hostility and unwise incredulity
of the family and friends of the late Judge Veigh.”
Colonel McArdle died in Frankfort
on the thirteenth day of December, in the year 1879.